Halsey Said Creating a Safe Space at Her Concerts Is Her Biggest Concern

"I’m so happy that that show was so amazing and so safe."

Every Halsey song is a jam-and-a-half, but what's perhaps even more beautiful than her music is her unwavering dedication to make the world a better place. Just last month, she was part of a suicide prevention campaign called "I'm Listening," while earlier in the year, she opened up about her battle with endometriosis, simultaneously busting stigma surrounding women's chronic pain while helping those with it feel a little less alone. Now, Halsey has made it clear that she tries her best to combine her work in music with her advocacy by making her concerts a safe space for her fans.

On "Elvis Duran and the Morning Show" Tuesday morning, Halsey performed two songs, including "Bad at Love" and a cover of Charlie Puth's "Attention." But she captivated the studio audience further with her interview with Duran, in which she discussed the first thing she thinks upon stepping off the concert stage: the welfare of her fans.

“[When] I walk into my dressing room, my first thought is: ‘I’m so happy that that show was so amazing and so safe," she told Duran. "And that everyone’s gonna go home and go to bed safely and that they had a good time tonight.'"

And her actions reflect that. Take, for example, the time she stopped her entire show last week to call out people who left her concert during her performance of "Strangers." The song is about a same-sex relationship between women and uses many female pronouns, and Halsey took it as a personal affront to her own bisexuality when she spotted people leaving during the song.

"I saw a couple of people who looked like they might have, maybe, walked out during that last song. That's not really a problem that we've ever had here before, so I just want to take the time to remind everyone that if you come to this concert you are agreeing to a part of a safe space for everybody in the room," Halsey said on the stage then. "And you bought a ticket to see a queer girl who loves her queer fans very f*cking much...I'm going to do everything that I can to make that happen, OK?"

And you bet that Halsey is going to keep on fighting for safe spaces in her concerts. “That’s a win for me, that’s a success, is knowing that I created a safe space for people," she told Duran.